ICCBR'99 Industry Day

An industrial day has become a feature of ICCBRs. During this day commercial CBR applications are showcased. It was interesting to think back to the first ICCBR'95 where most of the applications could best be described as "emerging"; that is prototypes and academic demonstrators. Now, just four years later there is no shortage of real commercial CBR applications earning a good living.

The day was opened by Brigitte Bartsch-Spörl of BSR Consulting.

Brigitte Bartsch-Spörl
Ian Watson I was invited to give the opening talk at the Industry Day, and was given the luxury of having one hour to introduce the concepts underpinning CBR to an audience who might include industrialists new to the subject. I then discussed several early influential CBR applications and highlighted some recent success stories ending with the observation that e-commerce was a great opportunity for CBR. This was a theme that many others would touch on over the next few days.

download the presentation (312KB pdf file)

Hermann von Hasseln, of DaimlerChrysler in Stuttgart, then presented the first application talk describing DELFI - The Central Service Hotline for Mercedes Benz Dealerships. This is a global system that provides support 24x7 for Mercedes dealerships and is an impressive example of how CBR systems are able to scale up to support large real world problems.

Hermann von Hasseln

Tinky Bart, of Tote-m Business Architects in Amsterdam described the implementation and delivery of a case-based  knowledge management system at Nuon (a Dutch utility company). This talk was very  interesting because it emphasised the organisational barriers that had to be overcome to make the system successful. Tinky Bart
After an excellent lunch (every lunch and dinner was included in the registration fee and  they were all great "all you can eat" buffets - representing really good value for money and heaven for starving CBR students), the afternoon session focused on e-commerce CBR applications. Peter Grimm, of Quoka Lampertheim described Intelligent Online Advertising by Quoka with CBR. Quoka is an online market-place, where people can bring goods and services to sell and others can come to buy. It combines features from auction sites like eBay with online shopping malls. CBR is used by Quoka to parse a users free-form query into a database query. Currently their system has 1.2 million items in its database and they predict 30 million by the end of 1999.
Download the presentation (182KB pdf)

Peter Grimm

Alex Ryan of IMS Dublin then described the successful Hooke and MacDonald  Property Letting System from Dublin. This is a deceptively simple online system that helps people find rented accommodation in Dublin. The simple advantage of CBR for online product selection is that you are always given the closest match to your query, instead of "Sorry, we have no items that match your request". This is a much more realistic selling model since typically you will not find a product that exactly meets all your requirements. You're going to see a lot more of this sort of product on the web in the years to come. Interestingly Alex also described the intangible benefits that Hooke & MacDonald have reaped by being the first to go online with this sort of service.

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The day was rounded off by a very thoughtful presentation from Brigitte Bartsch-Spörl who was able to share her accumulated wisdom from being a pioneer CBR consultant. In particular she focused on the organisational and people issues essential to any CBR project and advised us not to concentrate early project efforts on tool selection.
Download Brigitte's presentation (31KB pdf)

It was clear from these presentations and several others later in the conference that CBR is now a mature technology. People are now concentrating on business process matters, organisational issues and methodology rather than being concerned with the technology per se.

The day then concluded with the conference reception and more than a few good German beers!

the conference reception
the conference reception

the Irish at work
the Irish "at work" in the bar

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